hello, I have a simple question in C++, if I have a vector A=[1,2,3,4], is there a fast way other then doing a loop to have the combinations [1,2] [1,2,3] [2,3] [2,3,4] [3,4]
At the moment it's unclear from an answer posted and tagged with just c++ if the question is seeking to solicit answers from a C++11 perspective or not. There are plenty of people who say yes (my compiler has reasonable support already) and plenty of people who say no (my compiler barely supports...
You know, I've been an active contributor on the C# tag for a long time, and we have 4 different versions of the language, and 5 different tags: one for each version, and a versionless one. We never had any issues with this.
The new versions just naturally roll into the versionless tag.
@awoodland what difference does that make? There are people who still, for various reasons, use C# 2.0, for example, even though they're using MS .NET. A sinlge (primary) vendor doesn't make version issues go away
Yeah, I don't see the problem either. Now C++ is temporarily platform-dependent. That can affect which answer solves the OP's issue, but doesn't affect what's useful for other readers (who ultimately matter more), and makes no difference in the long run.
and I don't really think it's a problem in practice. If people want to ask something that's about one specific version of the standard, they specify that in the question
@jalf The "schema architect" my old company wanted to hire was married to MS, and denied that SQL was standardized at all. Claimed his highly-specific code could easily be migrated to MySQL, though.
hmm, I'd put RAII up near the front, along with object lifetime. I think those are such critical concepts in C++, trying to do anything more than Hello World without them is doing the students a disservice
The most useful facet, codecvt, has been extended with new utility templates in the new standard, but there's still no clean way to write a custom one. So it's now incredibly brittle.
@RMartinhoFernandes not for simple example programs. and not in general either, since the purpose is to communicate, not to adhere to some silly mechanistic guideline. :-)
@awoodland Right, I'm just saying that identical syntax would be used for orthogonal concepts. You end up using multiple inheritance syntax if you want to inherit enumerators and specify an underlying type at the same time… yuck.
This is also something I happen to want, but haven't gotten around to trying to solve. Here's an untested solution. EDIT: I tried it out and it works great! This is my very first C++11 utility macro. Also I added a one-past-the-end enumerator to help extend it to "derived" enumerations.
#define ...
@KerrekSB If you don't need any of the features mentioned by awoodland here or me in that answer, then yes. Otherwise, they're A Good Thing that's still too painful to put into practice.
C++11 introduces strongly typed enums, using enum class:
#include <iostream>
enum class Color
{
Green = 0
};
enum class Fruit
{
Banana = 0
};
int main() {
Color c = Color::Green;
switch (c)
{
case Fruit::Banana:
std::cerr << "Banana" << std...
@RMartinhoFernandes Hehe. The only applicable comment I could make was "First time you ask a question that can be answered meaningfully", but in the spirit of keeping things civil, I'm just not going to.
@RMartinhoFernandes But that's just adding those two colons to my code!
@Potatoswatter No, but I wonder whether this design addition really brought that much to the table. For example, if I had void f(EItem e), then it'd be cool if I could now get away with e == Banana, or even e.is(Banana).
But without such a pay-off, the advantage seems small.
@KerrekSB Agreed. Non-conversion should be separate from required qualification. For what it's worth, though, in the cases when you want to require qualification, non-conversion may always be appropriate.
Is there any way to separate expressions so that they remain the same? Add spaces or something, it gets quite messy and I want to be able to read it :(
@Potatoswatter I don't know much about grep, it's the first time I've used it. I have an assignment in school and I want to double check which results I get. I have all the strings I want in a textfile, and I'm using grep to fetch them
Very interesting: "Boost.Move emulates C++0x move semantics in C++03 compilers and allows writing portable code that works optimally in C++03 and C++0x compilers."
So guys, if you are bored, have a look at my assignment and see if you get the same regexp. You'll probably get something smaller and better. pastebin.com/XyvAVxn5
@CatPlusPlus I'd say it's a decent assignment because it actually specifies the rules they want you to assume. A stupid assignment would've been one which simply said "write a regex that describes all valid email addresses"